District Attorney Marco Serna says he will appoint a special prosecutor to review “additional information” in a 2017 police shooting that killed a 24-year-old man who was living with schizophrenia in his southeast Santa Fe apartment.

The move marks a change for Serna, who accepted the conclusion of a panel of three DAs — from Albuquerque, Clovis and Las Vegas, New Mexico — in early 2018 that the two Santa Fe Police officers who fired should not be criminally prosecuted for the killing.

In March, when Serna announced that the panel had concluded no charges should be filed against officers Jeramie Bisagna and Luke Wakefield, Serna’s spokesman said the first-term Democratic prosecutor who is now running for Congress would adopt the panel’s findings.

By that time the family had agreed to accept a $400,000 settlement with the city of Santa Fe in a wrongful death lawsuit. Wakefield and Bisagna fired 17 bullets into Anthony Benavidez’s apartment in Tuscany at St. Francis on July 19, 2017, fatally wounding him.

Weeks after the March announcement, Serna met with Benavidez’s family and their legal team.

Prior to the meeting, the family had detailed in a letter to Serna several concerns with the panel’s legal analysis of the shooting, which took up a single paragraph in a seven-page findings document.

Serna then assured the family he would appoint a special prosecutor for a fresh review.

But he didn’t do anything with the case between April and mid-August. That’s when NMID and the Santa Fe Reporter inquired about the status of the case. Serna said Thursday he would hire a special prosecutor to review the information as he promised the family he would do.

“We both left that meeting—me and my attorneys, them and their attorneys—in the same direction, I think, but with a misunderstanding on who was gonna take the initial step,” Serna says. “But I am happy to, like I said, if they have additional information, I will provide resources to hire a special prosecutor to review that additional information, in addition to the file.”

His office already has received “additional information,” in the form of the letter the family sent him after the panel issued its findings on the shooting.

The DA said he had two lawyers in mind, both trial attorneys with experience in “complex cases” and “homicide cases,” but he declined to name either.

“I am guardedly optimistic,” Shannon Kennedy, the Albuquerque-based civil rights lawyer who is representing Benavidez’s family, said Thursday afternoon after learning Serna would appoint a special prosecutor. “I want to believe that fresh eyes will do the right thing and take this case to a preliminary hearing so there can be a prosecution of these officers. But we’ve been waiting months and months, so until we actually see the appointment letter, no one is exhaling.”

The two officers remain employed by Santa Fe Police, but spokesman Greg Gurule said an “internal investigation is ongoing.” City police have a policy of refusing to release details about the outcome of internal investigations including discipline records.

This story was published in collaboration with the Santa Fe Reporter, an NMID partner.

Editor’s note: The story has been updated to include a quote from Serna explaining his rationale about the next steps and what the victim’s family considers “additional information.” You can listen to our interview with District Attorney Marco Serna.

This poor man wasn’t “living with schizophrenia in his southeast Santa Fe apartment.” They weren’t roommates, for heaven’s sake. He was suffering from schizophrenia, which is a terrible disease that’s compounded by the fact that the disease itself often keeps its victims from seeking or accepting help. You wouldn’t say someone was “living with cancer” or any other medical condition. Mental illnesses are also medical conditions with physical components — they just impact the way the mind works rather than the body.

It seems that Serna’s bid for the U.S. House seat has some positive effect; his “willingness” to look again a this killing.

The reason for abandoning the use of Special Grand Juries, is NOT that they were secret, is was because they WERE NO LONGER secret, following upon a ruling in the Ellis case. Thus, the GJ transcript of the Jeanette Anaya case become public, and it showed the cover_up by the NMSP assisted by the DA.

So, Serna, claiming “conflict” sent cases off to his fellow DAs, none of whom wished to prosecute cops. Thus, he solved his problem, clearing the cops while having “clean hands”.

What “should” he have done? He should have used a “real” Grand Jury, without DA presence, to investigate cop shootings. An independent Grand Jury, without his influence, could decide to indict, or not, the officer(s). No conflict. Any possible conflict, in prosecution, could be resolved “after” indictment. But, this doesn’t serve Marco’s need, which to NOT prosecute cops, due to some sham.

Marco is busy misleading us about the truth, and his options. He seems totally dishonest, and should not be considered for higher office; in fact he should be indicted, by an independent Grand Jury.